Mexico City is a big city with a huge population and yet it feels quaint and intimate. Some districts can feel chaotic but not in the overwhelming way that other big cities around world do.

Of course, like other large cities, impoverished communities coexisting with posh neighborhoods is part of the reality here. Mexico City has everything in between these extremes in the socio-economic scale. Homelessness also exists, and it’s heartbreaking to see here just as it is everywhere else in the world.

Day and night, Mexico City seriously bustles with life, thriving commerce, superb street food vendors, splendid mercados (including night-time markets), bohemian nightlife, sumptuous fine dining restaurants, opulent luxury brand stores, magnificent museums, impressive art galleries, brilliant traditional artisans, wonderful bookstores, world renowned chefs and one of the largest and most spectacular urban parks in the Western Hemisphere. Chapultepec Park is the second largest park in Latin America. And It’s a world of its own. The park even contains some of the most majestic museums I’ve seen.

Music is everywhere, and it seems like it’s always festive party music!

Mexico City is cosmopolitan and sophisticated -- but it also conveys a sense of simplicity and authenticity with the down-to-earth and laid back friendliness of a charming town. It’s hard to understand how a city with a population of 21.3 million can feel so delightful and enchanting.

I love many places on this beautiful planet and I’ve had the privilege of encountering exceptionally kind and generous human beings in all our travels. But I have to say that Mexico City is a place dear to my heart. Its impressive culture and amazing cuisine are second to none. But there’s something about Mexico City that I find especially endearing: and that is the people. Everyone we encounter is extremely polite, genuinely welcoming, helpful, warm and friendly. They really make us feel at home. - Amira

Big businesses in Mexico City tend to close on Sundays. But many of the smallest businesses and street vendors stay open everyday, including Sunday.

I spent my Sunday yesterday meandering through small markets that sell agro-ecological products.

These small open markets are wonderful to explore. You can find fruits, vegetables, flowers, cheese, mezcal, chocolate, tacos, supplements, handmade shoes, clothes and much more.

The food producers grow or make everything using organic practices, but they’re not necessarily certified organic. The sellers of non-edible products tend to make them by hand as well.

Most of these markets are pretty new, having started only in the past couple of years. And they're popular and growing.

I’m noticing a lot initiatives in Mexico City to promote and support ecological agriculture as well as clean air -- from electric bikes and scooters to special privileges for bike riders to support for these agro-ecological markets.

Mexico City has bookstores everywhere — many of them are tiny specialty stores trading in rare or niche books. Other bookstores, like this one, sell a great selection of books, plus offer coffee and snacks and nice areas to sit and read.

Best of all, for at least one gringo, this bookstore has an entire section of libros en Ingles!

Wait, remind me again why we’re all so eager to get rid of spaces like this in favor of Amazon? - Mike

Google Translate is one of those apps that has been around for years, and which therefore everyone mostly ignores. But Google is constantly improving it — on the backend, with the artificial intelligence — where it really counts.

Their visual translation feature, which used to be another app called Word Lens, is still miraculous. (Google bought it years ago and integrated it into Google Translate.) I love how it translates printed words while retaining their contextual place in your visual field. - Mike

I don’t often work in co-working spaces, mainly because they’re too expensive and also because I prefer the coffee and food at a coffee shop.

But I discovered a place here in Mexico City called Coffice, run by the couple you see here.

Their prices are astoundingly low. And they also make delicious home-made food. (I haven’t tried their coffee, but I’ll bet it’s good.)

How low are their prices? Well, their “Basic” plan is $1.50 an hour. The “Quickie” plan is only $5 for three hours and comes with a snack. And the “Workaholic” option charges only $9 for the whole day, with a 10% discount on food. And all their plans come with all the coffee you can drink.

Crazy, right? I don’t know how they do it.

They also offer very fast WiFi.

If you’re familiar with Mexico City, you’ll know their location. They’re right in front of La Cibeles Fountain in the middle of La Roma.

Amira and I had a lovely and adventuresome dinner at the posh and innovative restaurant, Lorea. As you can see from our photos below, the place is really thinking outside the box with ingredients, plating and flavors.

From front to back: A kind of dosa-like roll with cheese, herbs and sprouts; chinchayote, salsa and corn; and chilacayota with pickled beef on top.

Soft shell crab, hoja santa and vinegar; and also mint and pistachio mochi.

Warm salad with pig crisps and bread crumbs.

Kanpachi with sofrito and negrito mushrooms.

Cuitlacoche (which is a fungus that grows on corn) with barley and pipicha, which is a Mexican herb.

An amazing cocktail made with mescal and cucumber.

Beef Wellington and potato puree with asparagus.

Preserved hibiscus flower with strawberry cream and a tequila-based sauce.

In recent days I've been working almost nonstop on the Mexico City Experience, which starts December 28th. All that nonstop work means Mike and I have been having fun almost nonstop as well.

I created the Gastronomad Experiences to share my passion: Finding food visionaries, tasting everything and deeply understanding every local food culture wherever we roam.

That I'm able to do this is the result of what can only be described as: luck. I'm lucky. We're lucky. And I'm filled with gratitude for it.

I wrote an article on my Spartan Diet blog about how I try to cultivate the life I want to live based in the wonderful concept of ikigai (which roughly translates to the realization of one's purpose). It's really our philosophy of life and what drives us.

Sometimes I feel guilty that we get to experience so much joy. Of course, our lives also contain big helpings of adversity and sadness. This is universal. But there is also so much joy.

I often wake up and realize where I am. (This morning, I realized I was in Mexico City.) And when I realize this, my heart is immediately filled with gratitude for the privilege of living in so many wonderful places.

We've been traveling for more than 12 years. That may seem like a long time. But the more we explore this beautiful planet the more certain we are that we never want to stop.

This wine is made from mysterious grapes of unknown variety, but which could be dolcetto grapes (an Italian variety commonly found in the Piedmont region). The vines, which grow in San Antonio de las Minas in Baja California, are 70 years old.

The wine is low in sulphites, and is made without added yeast or other additives and without filtering, according to the winemaker.

The wine was very nice!

(Also: The label is pretty funny. The front label shows a luchador (masked Mexican wrestler) who's naked. The back label shows the same luchador from the back.)

Mexico City is such an incredible foodie city, and now has a rapidly emerging modern, hipster international food scene.

(We still have room for one more couple, if you'd like to join us on this gastronomic adventure of a lifetime!)

Mexico is one of the greatest food hotspots in the world. It's the country that’s gifted the world with chocolate, vanilla, corn, avocados, tomatoes, chili peppers many other delicious and essential foods.

While all Mexican foods are found worldwide, we believe the most delicious and authentic expressions are found in their country of origin. And all regional Mexico foods, which differ greatly from one another, are available in the nation's capital. Eating in Mexico City is like eating everywhere in Mexico.

Mexico is the land of tacos, Frida Kahlo and mariachi. Mexico City was the capital of both the Aztec and Spanish empires and today is home to the world's highest concentration of metropolitan museums.

During our Mexico City Experience, we'll dine at Mexico's best and most famous restaurants. We'll visit the city's top markets and food producers. We'll taste mezcal, tequila, pulque and sample the country's emerging wines. We'll picnic on boats, floating through otherworldly Aztec canals. We'll ring in the new year with a spectacular New Year's Eve party in a true Mexican style fiesta. And lots of secret surprises!

We'll take professional-quality photos of the whole experience for you to keep and share, so you can focus on having the time of your life.

Here's how the whole thing works. We'll pick you up from the Mexico City airport. Our small group will stay together in a wonderful spot in a cool neighborhood in the city. And We'll drop you back off at the airport at the end. Everything (except your airfare) is included -- food, lodging, transportation and activities -- in the price.

The Mexico City Experience takes place December 28, 2018, through January 2, 2019!

The Prosecco Experience starts in just one week! I’m sooo excited! It’s going to be epic!

Also, I’m super happy that all The Gastronomad Experiences for 2019 have sign-ups already, even though they just recently went up on the website! (Don't worry -- they all still have availability as well!)

Hooray! And thank you to all who did and will sign up and join us on one of our adventures next year. Special thanks to those of you who have sign up for two or three Experiences! Thank you for appreciating what we do and for continuing to believe in us.

Next week’s Prosecco Experience is actually the first Gastronomad Experience we’re hosting for a second time, and it’s a great feeling!

And, of course, it’s going to be different than the first one! Each Experience is unique!

For example: We'll host the amazing and talented food writer, photographer and cookbook author, Valeria Necchio, who will join us for The Prosecco Experience next week!

A local Venetian who’s currently spending time in Piemonte, Valeria will join our small group for a day of cooking and chatting. She’ll talk about her book, her life growing up in a multi-generational Venetian family, and she’ll even teach us about food photography! We’ll conclude the day with a magical long table dinner gathering by the fire!

Veneto, Valeria’s beautiful cookbook, will be the inspiration for a day of handcrafted food from the book’s recipes, including her delicious handmade pumpkin gnocchi with sage butter and walnuts! She also has expertise in Gastronomic Sciences and History so we’ll get to do some deep learning about Venetian cuisine and the Veneto region in general.

Her book is more than just a cookbook -- it's a beautiful composition of family recipes, food anecdotes and wonderful storytelling through food inspired by her own upbringing and her family traditions in the Venetian countryside.

I’m so incredibly happy to have Valeria join us for a day of authentic Venetian revelry with food, wine and a dinner gathering to remember for the rest of our lives!

The Gastronomad Experiences are about learning, connecting, appreciating and enjoying life in the most profound way through meaningful and fulfilling gatherings with inspiring people in the world most beautiful places!

We only have one life to live. And it’s up to each of us to create the life we want. That's been our Gastronomad philosophy for 12 years, and we're sticking to it!

Earlier this year, our friend Claudio invited us to his winery's harvest party, which took place yesterday. So we made a point of being here in Italy for it in advance of our upcoming Prosecco Experience.

The winery is L'Antica Quercia, a shockingly beautiful organic winery and vineyards on the Prosecco Road in Conegliano between Venice and the Dolomites.

Back then, Claudio and his winemaker Umberto told us about a wine he was working on -- a singular and pure prosecco.

To oversimplify, sparkling wines are made more or less like still wines. But then they're made to sparkle with a secondary fermentation, which almost always involves the addition of yeast and sugar. For champagne and most sparkling wines, this carbonation takes place in the bottle. But for most proseccos, it happens in pressurized steel tanks.

This new sparkling prosecco is unfiltered and unfined, and acquires its bubbles without the addition of yeast or sugar. Of course, carbonation requires yeast and sugar. But the yeast is from the vineyard and the sugar is from the grapes.

Long story short: This kind of wine is very hard to make. And very risky for the winemaker.

While we were standing there before dinner, Claudio showed us the brand-new labels for the new prosecco (the designers had brought it to the party). L'Antica Quercia labels form a Japanese-inspired inky “mural” when you line up the wine bottles in the right order.

The winery is named after an old and perfect oak tree (the tree is highlighted in medieval church records). After dining with Umberto and his family and colleagues at the party, we were invited to try the new prosecco under the oak tree!

The friendship, the scenery, the shade of that majestic oak tree -- and the prosecco! Wow.

The wine is actually hard to describe, but it bears all the marks of its sublime origins and natural processes.

This prosecco represents the rare ability of the winemaker to maximally insert himself into the process in order to maximally remove himself from the product and let you taste the work of the microbial world, the grape, the vineyard and the region.

It was a magical moment, and we were filled with gratitude to have been able to enjoy the party, the meal, the incredible wine and, above all, the company of such wonderful, soulful and skillful people.

Claudio told me that he might not actually sell this wine. But if he does, I'll be sure to post about it and tell you how to get some.

And, of course, our Prosecco Experience gastronomads will be tasting this wine in a special and exclusive tasting with Claudio. I can’t wait for them to try it….

We define a "tourist" as a category of consumer -- a consumer of products and services aimed at holiday-makers on vacation.

When you join one of our Gastronomad Experiences, you're a maker, a participant, a taster -- a food and culture explorer. You become a temporary local.

Each day is filled with amazing experiences, and each experience is exclusive to us. These are not "services" provided for tourists. We have lived in each of the places where we have Experiences, and have spent years developing special relationships with local food visionaries, makers, artisans and others.

We take you inside the culture, where you'll get to know these wonderful people, learn how to make the food and taste the very best of everything.

Here's what people say about Gastronomad Experiences:

"Planning an experience this exceptional by ourselves would be impossible without the years Mike and Amira have spent living in these locations and their dedication to making each event perfect."

"The experiences that we lived were truly real and authentic."

"It was clear that Amira and Mike had established a real relationship with everyone and every place we visited. We were welcomed and treated as if we were family."

"Everything was expertly organized and of top notch quality."

"A relaxing, casual, and friendly get-together with a small group of food and wine aficionados in one of the greatest gastronomic places in the world."

"Every day was filled with culinary activities and fascinating destinations where we learned about local specialties, ate fabulous meals and soaked in the beauty of the region."

Today, the ability for people to travel more can be limited to a relatively small number of professions. But over time, thanks to changing attitudes and demands on the part of the workforce, and technology, that option will only grow.

In those 12 years, we've formed beatiful, lifelong friendships with wonderful people all over the world. We've seen amazing things, and tasted incredible food.

Most recently, we've started sharing our approach to living and traveling in the form of our Gastronomad Experiences, which are culturally authentic, food-obsessed travel adventures.

As the first and only of its kind, The Gastronomad Experiences focus on the genuine exploration of a region’s culture through gastronomy and oenology in the world’s most beautiful places.

When you join one of our Gastronomad Experiences, you'll go inside the local culture in a way that's impossible with tourism.

We participate in authentic local traditions, create magical gatherings and explore incredible locations. You’ll be immersed in the way of life while learning from the local producers and makers, enjoying local delicacies and making friends with local food and wine visionaries.

And the only way to be part of these adventures is to join us! Give yourself the gift of an unforgettable, once-in-a-lifetime exuberant, blissful, joyous and bubbly adventure!

We travel not to change the world, but to be changed by it.

You will never see food and wine the same way again. You will be delightfully transformed in wonderful ways you never imagined.

Argentina’s currency, the peso, has now fallen to 38 pesos per dollar. The country has lost around 50% of its value against the US dollar this year.

That means prices have gone way up for Argentines — and way down for Americans in Argentina.

Normally, Argentina is an unusually expensive country. But the financial crisis and the peso's plunge makes Argentina much more affordable, at least for now.

In a perfect world, a million gastronomads would rush into Argentina to take advantage of the currency plunge. And this could help Argentina through the crisis.

Unlike tourists, who tend to gravitate to already overpriced hot spots for their vacations, the overcrowding of which drives prices for locals way up to the point where they have to leave their homes and neighborhoods, gastronomads are good for local economies.

During an economic crisis like the one Argentina is suffering from, unemployment goes up, and consumer spending goes down. Stores, restaurants and other businesses suffer because people stop buying things, so they lay people off. It's a hard situation to recover from.

The great thing about gastronomads is that they make their money in one country and spend it in another. That means an American gastronomad living in Argentina is spending money in Argentina and stimulating Argentine businesses, and without taking a job from an Argentinian.

Gastronomads rent homes and rooms and cars from locals who need the money, usually in non-tourism zones. They shop in stores and food markets, dine in restaurants, take taxis and Ubers and advertise for local businesses by blogging and posting photos on social media.

The only problem is that there aren't enough gastronomads yet, and not enough engaging in this brand of economic opportunism.

If a million gastronomads did this, moving from troubled economy to troubled economy based on wherever the value of currency plummets, it would have a softening effect on whatever economic crises pop up, infusing those countries with foreign cash until they can get their economies going again.

This is a classic example of a net positive impact of capitalism that Adam Smith never imagined: Gastronomads, taking advantage of the flexibility of nomadic living and acting in their own self-interest, could materially improve the lives of people all over the world suffering from an economic crisis.

The problem is that certain places become "famous" among visitors. They flock there in their millions. This drives up prices. In order to stay in business, shops and restaurants and other places must cater exclusively and expensively to the tourists, turning the original thing into a simulacrum of what made it famous in the first place.

It also drives prices down, specifically the price of airfare and hotels, further encouraging ever larger numbers of people to flock to the well-traveled locations.

Something like 670 million people "traveled" in Europe last year, a total that includes Europeans traveling domestically or elsewhere in Europe, and also foreign visitors from outside Europe.

The trend is driven by other factors. Instagram is a constant, compelling advertisement for exotic locations. The rise of China and the increasing desire in that country for foreign travel is another.

Overtourism ruins the places people love. And it ruins the experience of traveling.

Airports are mobbed. AirBnBs are harder to book.

Locals are driven out of their neighborhoods and cities because it's more lucrative to serve tourists than locals.

Locals come to resent visitors, creating an feeling of hostility.

Cities like Barcelona and Amsterdam respond by restricting services like AirBnB and Uber, making travel there deliberately more challenging.

We invite you to join our Prosecco Experience to find out what this approach to travel is all about.

Instead of a hotel, we'll all stay together in a beautifully restored traditional farmhouse with a view of vineyard-covered hills. After a delightful breakfast each day, we'll head out and explore the most delicious things the Prosecco Hills has to offer, plus one glorious day in Venice.

During The Prosecco Experience, we'll meet the world's greatest makers of prosecco, as well as the winemakers who produce incredible red, white and orange wines in the region.

The Prosecco Experience is about prosecco and the wines of the region. But it's also about all the things that go with prosecco: Otherworldly vistas, joyful gatherings, astonishing grappa and above all, the incredible, complex and subtle cuisine of Veneto.

You'll not only enjoy this delicious cuisine at every meal, you'll learn how to make it yourself.

The Prosecco Experience includes pasta-making class and other cooking classes. You'll learn how to make Italian cheese, artisanal bread. And more. Much more.

We've even figured out how to visit Venice and avoid the tourists!

Every day is packed with delightful surprises, sweeping landscapes and joyful gatherings with new friends.